An adversary taunts Jeffrey—saying he and his "useless twin brother" should have died—and orders his killing so Zack can take Jameson Group and claim a cut. Gerald is told who killed their parents and urged to avenge them. Mr. Davis unexpectedly meets the supposedly dead Mr. Jameson amid gossip of a cliff jump. Then a man declares, "From now on, I am Jeffrey," pledging to avenge the family and reclaim the company. The episode closes with that identity swap announced, leaving the takeover plot and the ordered assassination unresolved.
After three days searching the mountains for missing Jeffrey Jameson, his family assumes he jumped after losing $2 billion in investments. A relative blames herself for urging the investment, while Grandpa swings between anger and resolve. With the company leader gone and shareholders furious, Grandpa announces a board meeting tomorrow and names Zack CEO. Zack reveals he has contacted Mr. Y, a top hacker and AI expert, claiming that obtaining Mr. Y's AI model architecture will secure Elliott Group's investment. The episode ends with the family racing to pull off that plan before the board meeting under mounting shareholder pressure.
Jeffrey suddenly reappears at the family company, shocking relatives who shout that he's a ghost and blame him for a failed investment that lost $2 billion. Family members threaten to strip him of the CEO title and demand explanations. A letter addressed to Gerald surfaces, in which Jeffrey claims Janice framed him by copying his fingerprints, accuses Max of causing an old car crash, and warns his laptop holds investigation results. As the board fights over leadership, a voice accuses the returned man: "You're not Jeffrey!" The episode ends with his identity and the laptop's contents unresolved.
A man claiming to be Jeffrey stumbles into the Jamesons' house and is seized as family insist Jeffrey died after a cliff fall. Janice, his wife, accuses him of flirting and of colluding with Zack to murder Jeffrey. The claimant says he saw Jeffrey fall and protests his identity while an accuser takes a hair and vows a DNA test to unmask the impostor and link Jeffrey's death to the speaker's parents' deaths. Investigators say dashcam footage could reveal a car used to cover a murder. The episode ends with threats and the looming DNA and footage checks.
At a family dinner where Grandpa is set to name the next CEO, relatives argue whether the man claiming to be Jeffrey is genuine. Some are convinced he's an impostor and plan to expose him at tomorrow's board meeting when leadership is handed to Zack. Others panic over a darker risk—one even asks, "What if people find out that we killed Jeffrey?" Meanwhile Zack pressures to secure the Elliott investment by buying off Mr. Y. The episode ends with Grandpa spotting that the supposed Jeffrey uses his right hand though Jeffrey is left‑handed, sparking sudden, unresolved suspicion.
When Janice exposes a man's real identity at a family gathering, he slaps her. Relatives react; Grandpa even defends the blow. Observers notice the man suddenly using his right hand despite always dining left-handed. He claims a left-hand injury, but suspicion grows that he isn't who he claims to be. Later at the company, a rival confronts Jeffrey, declaring the CEO post and Grandpa's shares will be his. The exposed man vows to find proof about Jeffrey's and his parents' deaths and to reveal the impostor. The episode ends with both sides promising the other will lose everything.
Janice and her father move to cash in now that "Jeffrey" has returned: they will demand the final payment on a stalled investment and, if unpaid, force him to use his 5% Jameson shares as collateral. Janice vows to expose him before Grandpa because she insists "he's not the real Jeffrey." At a meeting Janice presses the man for the $2 billion needed for phase two; he feigns ignorance—"What phase one and phase two? ... has nothing to do with me"—undercutting her leverage. His denial leaves her demand and exposure plan unresolved, setting up a decisive next move.
At a tense board meeting Jeffrey is confronted after he denies approving the previous $2 billion investment in his father's project. Colleagues demand a public explanation; the Jameson Group now shows a $2 billion loss and a breached contract threatens the firm's reputation. Some suggest he has amnesia; others angrily accuse him of lying. A staffer presses Grandpa, who knows the most about the investment, and argues Jeffrey's denial proves he's an imposter. The episode ends as the family corners him with a single charge: "Who the hell are you? What are you up to in our family?"
In the Jameson living room a man insisting he's Jeffrey Jameson confronts his grandfather while relatives call him an impostor. His wife repeatedly questions his identity, slaps him and accuses him of colluding with outsiders; another person even claims he once pushed a man named Zack off a cliff. He retaliates by asserting he is the future family head and CEO. The confrontation escalates when a family member reveals they ran a paternity test using his hair, Jeffrey's old sample, and Grandpa’s hair. They hand Grandpa the sealed result; he is urged to open it, leaving the truth unresolved.
Investigators burst in with a warrant to confront a man claiming to be Jeffrey Jameson, the company's CEO. Family members accuse him of murdering the real Jeffrey, using his face to trick them, and assaulting a relative; they beg Grandpa to recognize the impostor. The team opens the file, shows evidence and orders a police arrest. Uniformed officers arrive and demand proof in front of the household. The accused defiantly replies, "I am." With charges looming and proof yet publicly confirmed, the man's identity hangs unresolved as authorities prepare to act.